Verizon Charges You For Telemarketing To You

After he identified himself (“Mike”), I immediately asked the salesperson if this call would count towards my daytime minutes. The representative informed me that, yes, it surely would. Needless to say I wasn’t exactly pleased with this revelation.

I informed him I was no longer interested in talking to him as he was wasting my minutes, at which point he asked if I was interested in saving money with Verizon Wireless. I replied that I certainly wasn’t…

the correct response would have been “yes, I am interested in saving money…which is why I am hanging up”

@darkclawsofchaos: I agree. I don’t think this could be considered a fair practice because it is sort of considered the equivalent to forcing a collect call.

@urban_ninjya: I wonder this too. I don’t think cell providers should be able to charge for incoming texts because you have no control over them.I have software (and have had it for years) that I can plug in a persons phone number, the number of texts I want it to send and the frequency for the texts and it will do it all for me. I could easily send any random number 10,000 texts and run their bill up.

@xtc46: Most cell companies do not charge you unless you read the text messages. If you never “open” them, it does not charge you. Most of the newer (read <5 years) handsets report back to the network when a text message is read.

First.. why’d you answer it? Were you hoping that you had won some contest? Just because your phone rings doesn’t mean you have to answer it. I simply ignore calls from numbers I don’t recognize. So, if you are worried about your minutes, don’t answer the phone. Strangely this will keep your minutes from being used.

@aparsons: Wow, did everyone at Slashdot laugh at that? I’m betting you just cemented yourself as first nominee for the Leonard Nimoy Underwear Fanclub.

i would have asked for the person’s direct supervisor’s number, kept the person on the phone while i called from a land line, and then hang up when the super is on the line, and proceed to make a very large stink… i knew there was a reason i left verizon, but given what i have learned about call centers over the last year… could have had a lot of fun with this one, lol

“informed him I was no longer interested in talking to him as he was wasting my minutes, at which point he asked if I was interested in saving money with Verizon Wireless. I replied that I certainly wasn’t..”

@LTS!: I thought it might have been another company I was expecting a call from, but regardless, I still don’t think I should be charged minutes to speak to my cell phone provider.
@FLConsumer: If I happen to go over my minutes by 1 minute, I will [contemptfortheworld.blogspot.com]

In the same way I prefer black coffee and straight whiskey, I prefer fascism in its undiluted Japanese state, as it makes no pretences of regarding the individual intrinsically valuable.’ — Munro Williams

Well, to be honest, when I used US Cellular in New Hampshire several years ago, my plan included (standard) the first minute of all incoming calls free. That would certainly have covered this call.

However, that doesn’t change anything. Telemarketing a cellphone is illegal, for the same reason that junk faxes are illegal (you have to spend money to take the call). VZW should be aware of this.

I haven’t received any calls from Verizon asking me if I’d like to “save money” with them, but I have received a couple calls from them because my plan is “outdated” and they wanted to offer me a new, better plan for the same amount of money. I inform them that if it requires me to sign a contract, I’m not interested.

@LTS!: Cell Provider Telemarketers will often keep calling until you every day until you answer. His choices were to waste his minutes or suffer continued undesired calls, which isn’t a real choice at all.

Let just say I have a friend… that works in one of these places. Particularly the one that has been doing these kinds of calls. He filled me in how these types of calls work. What happens is that verizon gives a number of “leads” to the calling center, which have had overage charges somewhere in the past 3 months. Some of them have already changed their plans, but since they are in this set of leads, then they are called by the automated dialer. Now for the reps themselves, they have no idea who they are calling. What happens is the screen comes up as soon as the person answers the phone, in this screen, they have some information, which is not enough by the way, to make a sale. Then while they introduce themselves, they have to pull up the account on OnePos and look at what they can do and offer them that. If anyone has any questions I can probably answer most of them, as I think my friend works at this particular calling center.

@Rectilinear Propagation: The argument that verizon wireless has is that the cellphone number was left as the contact number, so therefore that is where they have to call. Also, I believe somewhere in the agreement with verizon it says that they can call you on your cellphone whenever they want pretty much.

ANY marketing calls on my cellphone are instantly hung up on. I don’t care if it’s during my “free” time or not, whether I’m running low on minutes that month or not. (We’ve had one month were we used some of our rollover minutes this year). They aren’t supposed to be calling. Period. I don’t even care if it’s AT&T/Cingular or not. It’s not even a matter of say No, let alone the facetious “No but thanks!” I use on the landline.

A friend of mine worked for what eventually became Verizon and all his minutes were free (actually, he just expensed them), he was constantly getting marketing phone calls and he would patiently explain to whoever that it was illegal. Still is I believe, although I’ve put my number on the NDNCL.